North Carolina home insurance premium base rates increasing about 15% by mid-2026

RALEIGH. N.C. — Base rates for North Carolina homeowners’ insurance premiums will increase on average by about 15% by mid-2026 as part of a settlement reached by the state Insurance Department and the industry.

The agreement announced Friday by Commissioner Mike Causey contrasts with the January 2024 request by the North Carolina Rate Bureau, which represents insurance companies, seeking a 42.2% overall average increase.

Causey, an elected official who began his third term earlier this month, formally rejected the bureau’s request last year. That led to a formal hearing that began in October and included multiple weeks of witnesses, evidence and arguments. The state Insurance Department said its witnesses would contend rates should be lowered or increased by less than 3%.

Except for the settlement, a hearing officer — in consultation with Causey — would have decided what the new rates should be. The Rate Bureau could have appealed that decision in court.

Causey said in a news release that the proposed rate increases “are sufficient to make sure that insurance companies, who have paid out large sums due to natural disasters and face increasing reinsurance costs due to national catastrophes, have adequate funds on hand to pay claims.”

The bureau attributed its large request to high inflation — particularly on building materials — combined with calamitous storms and “severely inadequate” premium rates to cover claims. The bureau’s requested increases had varied widely from just over 4% in parts of the mountains to over 99% in some beach areas.

The agreed-upon increases, carried out in two parts, will vary based on location. On average statewide, the base rate will increase by 7.5% on June 1 and by another 7.5% on June 1, 2026.

The highest increases generally will occur in parts of eastern North Carolina hit hard by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Florence in 2018, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported. For example, beach areas from Carteret to Brunswick counties will see an average 16% increase in mid-2025 and an additional 15.9% in mid-2026.

Areas harmed the most by historic flooding from Hurricane Helene in the fall will face lower-than-average increases. Base rates in Buncombe, Watauga and Yancey counties, for example, will increase by 4.4% in 2025 and 4.5% in mid-2026.

Among highly populated areas, base rates in Raleigh and Durham will increase on average by 7.5% in each of the next two years. In Charlotte, rates would increase by 9.3% in 2025 and by 9.2 % in 2026.

The settlement also bars the Rate Bureau from undertaking an effort to increase rates again before June 1, 2027, Causey’s release said.

Bureau Chief Operating Officer Jarred Chappell said separately that the settlement is “a step in the right direction” but that the bureau had asked for a larger increase “because that’s what recent claims data called for.”

“Storms have gotten stronger and more damaging, more people are living in disaster-prone areas, inflation in the construction industry has been particularly high and reinsurance costs have exploded. All these cost drivers remain an issue,” Chappell said in a written statement.

North Carolina insurance law contains a “consent-to-rate” exception that allows industry members to insure high-risk homeowners if they agree to pay premiums at rates that are up to 250% of the bureau’s rate.

While some insurers have pulled out of disaster-prone parts of North Carolina, the exception has helped prevent a mass exodus of home insurers from the state. About 40% of the state’s homeowners’ policies were set by consent-to-rate policies in 2022, The News & Observer reported.

Read More

  • Related Posts

    South Carolina State University on lockdown after gunfire at campus housing

    By SAMANTHA RUTT, US TRAINEE REPORTER Published: 23:29 EST, 4 October 2025 | Updated: 02:01 EST, 5 October 2025 South Carolina State University issued a lockdown advisory after reports of…

    South Carolina judge’s $1.5M beachfront home burned to the ground in possible arson attack just weeks after brutal decision against Trump administration

    A South Carolina judge whose beachfront property burned to the ground in a possible arson attack on Saturday had issued a decisive ruling against the Trump administration just weeks earlier.  Diane Goodstein,…

    You Missed

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney